(no title)
maCDzP
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4 months ago
I used to think stoicism was great. But now I think that it’s not so great. In retrospect I should have focused on changing my situation in stead of learning to live with it. Compared to Aurelius - I am not living around 0 bc - in today’s world I can change a lot of things.
cjbgkagh|4 months ago
scruple|4 months ago
card_zero|4 months ago
Everything we do has limits and obstacles. If you don't feel frustrated, then that's a completely ordinary situation and there's no point in highlighting your "acceptance", is there?
I suppose in tech terms it could be equivalent to "won't fix", but such matters should be swiftly forgotten. If you're experiencing ongoing acceptance, consciously, that's suboptimal and implies you'd still be right to complain.
Thus recommending acceptance to somebody is recommending defeat. The term acceptance entails bottled-up frustration or injustice. It may still be strategically right, but it's a twisted, contingent choice.
digianarchist|4 months ago
> But preemptive surrender is no sign of wisdom. Any reality made by human beings can be remade by them. The price of this power is mutual obligation: we can never let ourselves off the hook. The things we can accomplish together are, by definition, within our sphere of control, even if we have to act through structures that are bigger than any of us alone to achieve them.
Stoicism doesn't answer the question "what can and can't we control" and doesn't claim to. I think the modern neostoicism trend is to make the reader believe that they have little control over daily life, encouraging an almost narcissistic-nihilist response to ongoing events.
FloorEgg|4 months ago
At its core stoicism is about having the best possible judgement and taking the best possible actions. Sometimes acting makes a situation worse and so patience or restraint are what's best. It seems you've confused this situational wisdom with a universal principle.
Everything I've learned about stoicism has taught me to not waste energy on things I can't control so that I can spend it on making my life and the lives of people I care about continuously better.
an0malous|4 months ago
diego_sandoval|4 months ago
Stoicism doesn't tell you to just learn to live with things that you can change. That's only for things that you cannot change.
forgetfulness|4 months ago
I’ll be reading “Meditations” soon enough, but emphasis on the means to accept things you are helpless about, and not the opposite, can lead to learned helplessness.
If young people take up on these ideas, they just can’t know better at their stage in life, one where they can be, for the most part, helpless.
FredPret|4 months ago
One needs mental toughness. However it's better to solve problems for good and then have a higher technology base for the next generation to build on.
grey-area|4 months ago
Why was he nevertheless a stoic?
Isamu|4 months ago
delusional|4 months ago
I didn't even get 2 pages I to meditations before I could tell it was the philosophy of a very powerful man.
embedding-shape|4 months ago
portaouflop|4 months ago
But yea you can pick and choose parts of some ideologies as they are useful in the moment.
layer8|4 months ago
rolandog|4 months ago
[0]: "Episode #237 ... The Stoics Are Wrong - Nietzche, Schopenhauer" <https://www.philosophizethis.org/podcast/h48mld6lelcfrts-c55...>
wcfrobert|4 months ago
Robert: "I think you can be anything you want to be."
Teri: "Maybe in your World, Robert. Doesn't really happen that way in mine."
Robert: "Change your world."
wiseowise|4 months ago
“Change your world” said retired elite corps officer, and all-around badass Denzel Washington, to a young trafficked sex-worker without passport.
wakawaka28|4 months ago
Razengan|4 months ago
uvaursi|4 months ago
Imagine how you’ll feel about things tomorrow.